A clear-eyed 2026 comparison of furnished vs unfurnished rentals in Mexico for expats: real USD rent differences, lease lengths, what counts as furnished here, deposits, and how to choose based on how long you're staying.
2026-07-08
When you first land in Mexico, one of your earliest and most consequential decisions is whether to rent a furnished or unfurnished place. It sounds trivial. It isn’t. This single choice affects your monthly rent, your lease length, how much cash you tie up, how mobile you stay, and how quickly you can actually move in.
The right answer depends almost entirely on how long you plan to stay and how settled you feel — so let’s break it down honestly.
In Mexico, listings fall into three buckets, and the vocabulary matters:
That last point catches every newcomer. An unfurnished Mexican apartment can require you to buy appliances and even install lights before it’s livable.
Furnished commands a premium — typically 20%–50% more per month — but you skip the cost and hassle of furnishing. Below are realistic 2026 monthly ranges for a mid-range two-bedroom in popular expat areas:
| City / area | Unfurnished (2BR) | Furnished (2BR) |
|---|---|---|
| Mérida (Centro / north) | $550–$1,100 | $750–$1,600 |
| Playa del Carmen | $700–$1,400 | $950–$2,200 |
| Puerto Vallarta | $700–$1,500 | $1,000–$2,400 |
| Mexico City (Roma/Condesa) | $900–$1,800 | $1,300–$2,800 |
| San Miguel de Allende | $800–$1,600 | $1,100–$2,500 |
| Oaxaca / smaller cities | $400–$800 | $600–$1,300 |
Furnished units also more often bundle utilities, internet, and cleaning into the price — factor that in before assuming furnished is “expensive.”
This is the hidden fork in the road:
So the real question isn’t just “do I want furniture” — it’s “am I ready to commit to a year and a neighborhood?”
If you go unfurnished, here’s roughly what it costs to make it livable:
| Item | Budget outfit (USD) |
|---|---|
| Fridge | $350–$700 |
| Stove | $250–$550 |
| Washer | $300–$600 |
| Bed + mattress | $300–$700 |
| Sofa + living set | $400–$1,000 |
| Dining table + chairs | $200–$500 |
| Kitchen basics + small appliances | $150–$400 |
| Light fixtures, curtains, misc. | $150–$400 |
| Total to furnish a 2BR modestly | $2,100–$4,850 |
Domestic Amazon Mexico and Mercado Libre make furnishing fast and affordable, but this is real money you won’t recover — and reselling used furniture in Mexico fetches little.
Assumptions catch newcomers, so confirm every line item in writing:
A pattern that works beautifully: start furnished and flexible for your first 3–6 months while you learn the city and confirm the neighborhood you love — then sign an unfurnished 12-month lease once you’re sure, and furnish it your way. You pay a bit more upfront for the furnished cushion, but you avoid the far costlier mistake of locking into a year-long lease in the wrong colonia.
Here’s when unfurnished actually saves you money. Suppose furnished rents $400/month more than unfurnished, and furnishing an empty place costs you $3,000 one time:
| Length of stay | Furnished premium paid | Furnish-it-yourself cost | Cheaper option |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 months | $2,400 | $3,000 | Furnished |
| 12 months | $4,800 | $3,000 | Unfurnished |
| 24 months | $9,600 | $3,000 | Unfurnished (big win) |
The tipping point in this example is around 8–9 months. Stay less, furnished wins on pure cost and flexibility. Stay longer, unfurnished pulls clearly ahead — especially since you keep the furniture. Run your own numbers with the real rent gap you’re quoted.
Be aware that much of what shows up as “furnished” in expat hubs is really furnished short-term rental stock — priced by the month, sometimes with utilities and cleaning included, and easy to book online before you even arrive. That’s a feature, not a bug, for your landing period: you can secure a comfortable, fully equipped place from abroad, arrive stress-free, and use it as a base while you hunt for your longer-term home in person. Just don’t mistake short-term monthly pricing for a normal 12-month lease rate — it’s higher per month by design.
Do landlords negotiate on furnished rentals? Yes, especially for stays of several months booked directly. Offer a longer commitment or upfront payment for a discount.
Can I ask a landlord to furnish an unfurnished place? Sometimes. On a long lease, a landlord may add key appliances (fridge, stove, washer) in exchange for slightly higher rent — often cheaper for you than buying them yourself if you’re not staying long.
Will I get my deposit back? Usually, if you document the unit’s condition at move-in and leave it clean. Deposit disputes are the most common rental friction, so photograph everything.
Furnished vs unfurnished in Mexico isn’t really about furniture — it’s about commitment and flexibility. Furnished means higher rent but short leases and instant move-in; unfurnished means lower rent and more control, but a truly empty apartment, a year-long lease, and a guarantor to arrange. For most new arrivals in 2026, the winning strategy is to start furnished while you get the lay of the land, then switch to unfurnished once you’ve found the neighborhood that feels like home.
The hardest part isn’t the furniture — it’s knowing which neighborhood is right for you. That’s what we do. Book a call with the Mexico Living team or message us on WhatsApp, and we’ll help you find the right rental, in the right area, on terms that fit exactly how long you plan to stay.
Schedule a free consultation with our Yucatán real estate specialist.
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